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Here in England it is chiefly found in uncultivated 
places : in church-yards, about old walls, among 
rubbith in fhady places, about dunghills, in lanes, 
and fometimes about woods and hedges. It begins 
to flower in June, and maintains a fucceffion of 
flowers for two months. The berries are ripe in 
September and October. 
It is of great importance, that the knowlege of 
poifonous plants lliould be extended as much as pof- 
flble, that they may the better be avoided, and their 
fatal effects thro’ mifcake be guarded again!! : there 
can therefore be no impropriety in enumerating par- 
ticularly fome of thole places, where our Engliflh 
botanifts have oblerved it. Mr. Ray mentions its 
being found in the church-yard and lanes about Ful- 
burn in Cambridgelhire, Sutton-Colefield in War- 
wicklhire : in the Downs : at Cuckftone, near Ro- 
chefter in Kent, all the yards and backfldes are 
over-run with it. Ray. Syn. Upon Clifton-hill, near 
Nottingham ; alfo in a quarry near the cold-bath at 
Mansfield. Catal. Netting. In Currenwood - kins, 
near Burton in Kendal, and other places in Weft- 
morland. fVilfon's Syn. Dr. Wilmer found it among 
the bogs going down to Dorking in Surrey, plenti- 
fully. In Prefton church-yard, near Feverfham in 
Kent. Mr. Watfon found it by the wood-lide, un- 
der the park-wall, between Temsford- mills and 
Welwyn, Hertfordlhire ; and near the road between 
Rochefter and Maidftone. Mr. Blackftone found it 
in a lhady gravel-pit near the old park-wood at 
Harefield, and in the gardens at More-park near 
Rickmanfworth, plentifully. Specim. Botan. About 
Rochefter and Chatham, where it grows in the joints 
of 
